Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Grandfather Forces Granddaughter To Eat Beans She’s Allergic To, The Result Was Epic

by Layla Bui
October 30, 2025
in Social Issues

Family dinners can bring out some of the best, and occasionally, the worst, moments. For one young child, a simple refusal to eat beans turned into an unforgettable evening that no one at the table will ever forget.

When her grandfather didn’t believe that beans made her sick, he forced her to eat them. What followed was a dramatic turn of events that left everyone in shock and a lesson learned the hard way.

Did she get her point across? Keep reading to find out how her grandfather ended up cleaning up a mess he didn’t anticipate.

One determined little girl sat at her grandparents’ dinner table, staring down a bowl of slow-roasted beans despite knowing they’d wreck her from the inside out

Grandfather Forces Granddaughter To Eat Beans She’s Allergic To, The Result Was Epic
not the actual photo

'Told my grandpa I was allergic to the beans he made for dinner. He doesn't believe me & insists I eat everything I've been served. Ok, you're the boss?'

Was shooting the s__t with my grandma when this old story came up. Pretty mild but still brings a smile to my face.

To preface, I'm allergic (or at the very least wildly intolerant) to beans.

When I was a tot, my mom tried to feed me beans a few times and within five minutes,

I would projectile vomit right across the kitchen floor. She put two and two together and after that, no more beans for larniebarney.

So jump forward a few years, I was around 6 - 8 yrs old visiting my grandparents for winter break.

I loved hanging out with my grandfather; he'd always bring me neat things like books and logic puzzles for us to play through together.

That day in particular, he had bought me new crushed velvet pajamas covered in stars and comets.

I was super excited to wear them to bed and was already wearing them at the table when everything went down.

Dinner time rolls around and my grandfather reveals that he made slow roasted beans for us.

I immediately tell him and my grandmother that I don't eat beans because they make me sick.

My grandfather rolled his eyes and told me to sit and eat my dinner.

Now, to be fair, I was a little bit of a picky eater, but I never would claim that the food I disliked would make me sick.

I'd just say I didn't like [insert food]. Beans were the only thing I'd explicitly say made me sick.

I repeat again that I don't eat beans, that my mom never makes me eat them, and that they make me sick.

Grandfather starts getting mad and tells me that either I sit at the table

until I finish all the beans I had been served or I can go straight to bed and expect to be put on restriction for the next few days.

My grandmother tells him that he should just leave me be, but he isn't having it.

This was the only time I ever felt anything other than pure wholesome love for my grandpa.

He and my grandmother finished their dinner and started to clean up while I thought about what I should do.

On one hand, I could just go to bed and accept that I'd probably have no cartoon time for the next few days

but I was so mad that he didn't believe me that I refused to accept being punished for telling to truth.

So I sat there and ate the entire f__king bowl of beans. I'm 24 now

and that singular bowl of beans probably represents at least 80% of the beans I have ever consumed in my life.

I hated the texture, the smell, absolutely everything about what I was eating, but he said to eat them all so that's exactly what I was going to do.

About halfway through I start feeling strange but push through it,

swallowing the beans whole and washing them down with as much milk and cornbread as possible.

All in all it probably took me 15 or so minutes to finish, but it felt like hours.

I finish up, put my bowl in the sink, and softly announce that I'm done with all my food.

I remember he patted me on the back and said "see? it wasn't that bad was it?" as we walked down the hall towards the bedrooms.

At the very end of the hall was the doorway to his + my grandmother's bedroom, with a bathroom directly across the hall;

he told me to brush my teeth while he changed into his pajamas, and that he would come to my room afterwards to tuck me in.

I open my mouth to say ok and all of a sudden all my larniebarney alarms go off;

I about face so that I'm facing the bathroom, try to take the few steps to at least make it to the sink, fail,

and proceed to projectile vomit all over the floor, the vanity, the mirror and myself.

Chunks of beans and cornbread collected at my feet as I coughed up everything I had swallowed whole.

The milk mixed with the beans in the most horrific way possible, making the vomit thicker and stickier.

My new pajamas were absolutely ruined and the smell only made me vomit even more.

I started to cry as I stood in a pool of the vilest mixture of fluids I had ever seen come out of my body.

It was so sudden and violent that my grandparents couldn't even react right away.

My grandmother (who had been lying in bed but could still see everything go down) scooped me up and started consoling me.

I peeped at my grandfather, who was still standing there horrified at what he had just seen,

and stammered "I told you beans made me sick" in the most defeated voice I could muster.

My grandmother gave him a death glare and told him curtly that since he had pushed me to eat the beans, he could clean up the beans.

She helped me shower in their bathroom and calm down, until I asked her about my pajamas.

The stomach bile basically ruined them and she told me that we should just throw them away.

I cried even harder. When she finally got me to lay down and go to sleep an hour later, my grandfather was still purging the bathroom.

The next morning he apologized to me profusely and promised he'd never do anything like that again.

As far as I know, not only did he never again force me to eat anything I said I didn't want,

but he extended the same policy to the rest of his grandkids.

Years later, he'd say he could still remember the stench of the bathroom that night

and the disgusting sensation of scooping semi solid beans from every imaginable surface.

TLDR: Grandfather doesn't believe that I'm allergic to beans and tells me to finish my bowl of beans or be grounded.

I eat all the beans then projectile vomit all over the bathroom, leaving him to clean it up.

EDIT: because quite a few people have pm'ed or commented asking why my mom didn't tell them about my bean intolerance:

"I'm pretty sure she did when I was younger and they may have just forgotten

because they never make beans like that in the first place, even as a side dish.

For context, before this happened I had lived with them for six months straight at one point and we never had beans during that period.

I definitely remember mom yelling at my grandfather over the phone the next morning saying she had 100% told them before."

The Original Poster (OP) recounts a childhood experience where, despite a known intolerance to beans, their grandfather insisted they consume them, leading to a severe reaction. This incident underscores the importance of respecting children’s health needs and the complexities of intergenerational authority within families.

Research from PubMed indicates that food allergies and intolerances can significantly impact children’s daily lives and family dynamics. A systematic review found that children’s food allergies are associated with increased parental stress, meal preparation challenges, and changes to family mealtime routines.

Forcing a child to eat foods they are intolerant to can exacerbate these issues, leading to physical harm and emotional distress.

Dr. Jennifer Guttman, a psychologist specializing in family dynamics, emphasizes the importance of listening to children’s health concerns. “When a child expresses that a certain food makes them sick, their concern should be taken seriously,” she notes. “Ignoring these concerns can damage trust and lead to unnecessary suffering.”

The OP’s grandfather’s insistence on the child eating the beans, despite their clear intolerance, reflects a common issue in family dynamics where authority figures may dismiss children’s health needs. This can lead to power struggles and emotional distress for the child.

Parents and caregivers should create environments where children’s health concerns are respected and addressed. This includes open communication about food intolerances and a willingness to adjust family routines to accommodate these needs. By doing so, families can foster trust and ensure the well-being of all members.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These users shared humorous and relatable stories of dealing with food aversions and how their family members either forced or tried to deal with the situation

PsychologicalWarx − For thinking that you were probably fibbing about the beans, gramps sure got more than he bargained for.

While it was an evil MC for a small kid to execute, it was pretty wholesome how your grandpa handled the whole thing afterwards.

It's one of those rare cases where people actually learned from the MC they were subjected to.

loseunclecuntly − Peas. Peas were my downfall. My grandma insisted I try bites of them at her table.

Nope! I’d gag and scamper to the bathroom to hurl (thank 1900 house arrangement, the bathroom was right off the dining room).

Mashed, boiled, stewed those evil orbs of green grossness found their way to the toilet.

My mom finally told her to stop torturing me and just forget trying to push them down my throat.

[Reddit User] − Oh god. My nephew did something like this once to their baby sitter with green beans.

I don’t think he’s allergic to them, but his body violently rejects them.

Mom and dad knew it, so they don’t force him to eat them.

They even told the baby sitter, he has a very picky stomach and will/can only eat a selection of foods.

He will let you know what he would like for lunch/dinner. Well, she cooked whatever she wanted for dinner and included green beans.

He said he couldn’t eat them and after some back and forth,

she got really angry and yelled at him to eat them or he was grounded from electronics and could go to bed (it was only 6pm).

Well, he MC’d with the best of them and choked them down.

After he finished the last bite, he got up to put the plate in the sink,

stopped and turned towards her, and projectile vomited on her from the waist down.

That did not make her happy and sent him to bed.

My sister and brother in law got home at about 8:30 and asked where he was,

so she explained the whole story (of course twisted to make her look the victim).

My sister calls him down and asks his side of the story and he tells the truth. Well, green bean vomit is in the trash can.

Some LOUD words were exchanged and they fired her on the spot. He waved bye with a smile on his face.

DuckBoy87 − Cooked spinach was my kryptonite. Within a minute of downing any, it'd come back up.

Once my mother made me go to bed without supper because I didn't like what she served.

In the morning, she had to clean up my lunch and bile.

After that, if we didn't like supper, she'd give us peanut butter jelly sandwiches. Apparently I'd throw up when hungry, or something.

Dunno, I personally don't remember and this is a story my mom has told me.

This group discussed more serious food-related struggles

rabidzaheer − Oh man, that just sounds horrid.

I can kinda understand, while I don't seem to have digestion issues with brussel sprouts,

I cannot for the life of me eat them in any sort straight fashion.

When I was around 8-9 my parents made brussel sprouts for dinner and I just couldn't eat them.

My parents' thinking I was being picky (which is ironic considering I was never picky about anything) made me sit at the dinner table

until bed time because I would start gagging whenever I tried to eat the brussels sprouts.

Then I was told if I didn't eat them for dinner, I would be eating then for breakfast.

So I kept trying to take the smallest bites possible, didn't help very much.

Eventually I ate maybe half but my gagging only got worse.

Then I jumped up, an ran to the bathroom with my father telling me to get back to the table.

I then released my whole dinner into the toilet.

Too this day, I still cannot look at brussel sprouts the same.

Weirdly if they are a part of a dish and like shaved into it, it's not that bad

but cannot eat them roasted, steamed, grilled or any way in which they are the main flavor.

MamalehChaverta − I had a similar situation as a kid. I was NEVER a picky eater.

There were a few things I didn't like, but I had no problem eating most foods.

My parents went on a vacation, and we were staying with a family friend.

That morning, I was told they were ordering Chinese food for dinner.

Heck yeah! Chinese food is GREAT! My favorite!

She asked what I'd like, I told her, all was well. Until I came home from school with a bad stomach ache.

I got to the table for dinner still feeling like I was dying, and I sat at the table and tried to explain to

Sally that my stomach hurt and I couldn't eat.

Her husband started bullying me about it, how Chinese food is expensive and I'm wasteful.

I told him that I let Sally know my stomach hurt earlier that afternoon, but we had no way of knowing it would still hurt by dinner time.

(In hindsight, I now know that my frequent stomach aches, headaches,

and vomiting as a child were all from anxiety due to being bullied so badly.

I didn't get better at their house because I didn't feel comfortable there.)

I said I'd still be happy to eat it for breakfast. Apparently that wasn't the right answer. My brother speaks up for me.

"Mamaleh LOVES Chinese food. If she's saying she hurts too much to eat, there's a problem.

She'll definitely eat it for breakfast, though, she eats her cold leftovers all the time, the little weirdo."

Sally's husband says, "Eat it NOW or I'll take away your books." Not my books! Crying, I start to eat. I eat as much as I can while crying.

They WATCH me choke down every last bite. Everyone else had finished long ago, but they were...

I don't know, trying to prove I wasn't in pain? And then they watch me vomit all over the dining room table.

All over their pretty table cloth, the centerpiece, splashing across the table onto the kid across from me... It was just a nightmare.

My brother chirps, "Maybe she should have just had it for breakfast." Sally, finally, has something to say to her husband.

"Making Mamaleh puke it all up didn't waste a penny, right?"

omguserius − I’m the exact same way! And had the exact same experience at day care! Beans and franks.

Canned beans and franks. Cleaning up a carpet of puke because you don’t listen

when the child tells you that beans make him sick tends to make people more attentive to details like that later.

These commenters focused on their personal experiences with unusual food sensitivities

Mec26 − Eggs do that to me. One egg in a cake? Sure! I can have a slice. An egg itself, in any manner? Even just a few bites?

My insides doth protest WAY too much.

Apparently, my mom actually used the knowledge that it would make me puke asap a couple of times

when I was a kid when she was worried I might have eaten something harmful.

That was the kind of kid I was: constantly putting things in my mouth,

even the things I had to eventually realize was made of (in the eyes of my body) poison.

KiwiEmerald − When I was about 4-5 I was struggling to eat my dinner, had been told I needed to finish it for some reason, can’t remember.

But I didn’t chew the next bite of steak properly and only swallowed half of the meat,

but it was still attached by a ligament or gristle to the meat I hadn’t swallowed, so I started choking on it.

Ended up throwing up into my plate. Looked at it in shock/fear I almost died.

Mum(jokingly): You still need to finish your dinner! I just burst out crying. Fun times

latents − It is hard when you react badly to a food that isn’t a traditional allergen.

I know three people with varied levels of bad reactions to eating and/or using personal care items containing coconut,

and there are so many words that are code for coconut.

Since it is the current wonder ingredient, that stuff is in so many things,

from almost every toothpaste and soap to even store-brand Nutella and store brand rice krispy treats to vegetarian burgers.

I wish there was an app allergic people could use to scan products and see if their allergen is present.

Except when people know the problem, they probably would never think to warn you in advance when a product contains beans.

I hope your grandpa got you new pajamas.

While this story might bring a chuckle, it also highlights the importance of respecting a child’s food preferences and needs, especially when allergies are involved. Grandpa learned the hard way that larniebarney wasn’t just being picky, he was protecting himself from a very real physical reaction.

What do you think? Was Grandpa’s punishment justified? Or should he have listened to his granddaughter’s warning from the start? Let us know your thoughts below, and share any childhood food fiascos of your own!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

Related Posts

Man Shows Up At Ex’s Workplace Demanding Child Support For His Affair Baby, Ends Up Jobless
Social Issues

Man Shows Up At Ex’s Workplace Demanding Child Support For His Affair Baby, Ends Up Jobless

3 months ago
“Why Sit Next to Me When the Whole Streetcar Is Empty?” Man Questions Stranger’s Odd Choice
Social Issues

“Why Sit Next to Me When the Whole Streetcar Is Empty?” Man Questions Stranger’s Odd Choice

4 months ago
This Teen Called His Dad a Loser After Finding Out the College Fund He Was Promised Was Lost in the Stock Market
Social Issues

This Teen Called His Dad a Loser After Finding Out the College Fund He Was Promised Was Lost in the Stock Market

4 months ago
Daughter Chose Dad After His Affair, Mom’s Heartbroken
Social Issues

Daughter Chose Dad After His Affair, Mom’s Heartbroken

2 months ago
Boss Tries To Performance-Manage Him Out, Employee Uses Their Own Rules To Shut It Down
Social Issues

Boss Tries To Performance-Manage Him Out, Employee Uses Their Own Rules To Shut It Down

2 weeks ago
Mom Makes Teen Son Volunteer At Zoo After His Insulting Comment About Zookeepers
Social Issues

Mom Makes Teen Son Volunteer At Zoo After His Insulting Comment About Zookeepers

4 weeks ago

TRENDING

Boss’s Son Stole Food from the Office Fridge—Until One Co-Worker Made Him Puke in Front of Everyone
Social Issues

Boss’s Son Stole Food from the Office Fridge—Until One Co-Worker Made Him Puke in Front of Everyone

by Sunny Nguyen
September 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Mad Max Director Sets His Sights on Lady Gaga for Villain Role
MOVIE

Mad Max Director Sets His Sights on Lady Gaga for Villain Role

by Daniel Garcia
May 24, 2024
0

...

Read more
Dad Refuses To Pay Daughter’s Tuition After She Loses $20K Scholarship Over Missed Email
Social Issues

Dad Refuses To Pay Daughter’s Tuition After She Loses $20K Scholarship Over Missed Email

by Annie Nguyen
September 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Train Ride Turns Awkward When Passenger’s Beer Offends The Man Sitting Beside Him
Social Issues

Train Ride Turns Awkward When Passenger’s Beer Offends The Man Sitting Beside Him

by Marry Anna
October 11, 2025
0

...

Read more
How 10 Movie Couples With Remarkable Romantic Chemistry Currently Look Like
ENTERTAINMENT

How 10 Movie Couples With Remarkable Romantic Chemistry Currently Look Like

by Julianne Walters
April 17, 2024
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM